Spy in the form of deep
Engineers at the University of Maryland invented a spy robot with the shape of a worm or a butterfly.
Engineers at the University of Maryland invented a spy robot with the shape of a worm or a butterfly. This 'kid' in front of the camera is nicknamed R2G2. Its full name is Robot with Rectilinear Gait for Ground Operations. That is the news in the Novate.ru technology blog.
>>> Robot self-assembled as "the destroyer"
At first glance, the main disadvantage of R2G2 is its speed. The robot moves like a snake and is too slow. The R2G2 model moves in a straight line like a wormhole and can now reach speeds of up to 1.6 miles per hour, which is comparable to the slow pace of human walking.
In order to create R2G2 people have used 3D printing. Inventors have avoided the use of complex geometry and succeeded in simplifying robot assembly.
In the hope that anyone who owns the 3D printer will be able to reproduce R2G2. Intended use of new robots during search and rescue operations.
- Two more deep-sea species were discovered
- Discover new material form
- Found traces of new forms of iron from the Antarctic universe
- The 70cm deep sea swallowed the fish in the aquarium
- The fish community is forgotten in the deep sea
- The video shows an unprecedented deep freak monster
- The heart has the ability to heal itself
- Deep sea monster with strange sharp teeth throughout
- Dang May
- A 1 meter deep fire pit keeps on hurting the scientific community
Dragon robots can change aerial shapes Honda develops rescue robot can escalate like people Italy develops four-legged robots for disaster areas Built a six-legged robot NASA humanoid rescue robot Robots replace humans with dangerous things Robot made from 3D printing technology US troops show the most advanced robot